114 SNIP! SNAP! and a SUZANNE TALBOT Graces Your Head 11 '1 , ) A snip h re- a drap ther - a d ft touch over th ar. V oiIa ! a hat mold d to Y OUR head "" and adapted to YOUR f a= tur s. I n a jiffy th o é Ì)\ G n ius of fj ... SANNAT. , r ':'l> transforms Mt or soli 1 Jl7ì;. " bodi s into tru and , charming count rparts of th mor famous Parisian mod ls. Ev ry håt custom=mad - non r ady mad . In import d f lt as low as $6.00. "In import d sol í1 as low as $10.00. S ANN l ate. 4tlteJ ala/ler -at ó3t::ó7 W st 38th St. n ar óth Av ., N w York the homeless: the nIne-room duplex rents for about $6,500; seven-room silnplexes, $4,900; six-room simplexes, from $3,500 to $4,300. Your choice of decorative finishes is included, and service of a high order, as the owner, a pleasant gentleman, lives in the build- ing, and Brown, Wheelock: Harris, Vought are running it. Occupancy right now. TISTED as having a dignified appeal L for the economical, No. 14 East Ninetieth Street strikes a newish note in coöperatives: a building whose general construction and detail are no more I uxurious than that of the average rental offering, but sold with the prom- ise that the maintenance is half the sum that the annual rent of an equivalent apartment would be. I am lukewarm about the whole idea. The house is not very beautiful, unusual, or much fun. Pleasant open fireplaces and well- equipped kitchens and baths are offset by uninspired room arrangements, and by such details as the fire-tower exit in the clothes closet of a master's bed- room. These features are all obvious in the seven and eight-room apartments, but I can find no fault with the fourteen- room simplex, which is pretty grand. It is up high where the many windows in the living-room overlook the Park reservoir, the roofs of the new Church of the Heavenly Rest, and the Carnegie mansion; it has five master bedrooms and four baths, and a stunning array of cupboards and closets from the pantry on throughout the house. There are fireplaces in both living-room and din- ing-room, and a quiet library off the dining-room, where many would ap- preciate it. Its price is $68,000. The nine-room-four-bath suites are $24,000 to $25,000, and the sevens and eights from about $20,000 up to $27,000. Neither the ceil- ings, the floors, the wood trim, the doors, the windows, the radiators, nor the bathrooms have the handsome solidarity one has come to expect in coöperatives, and the light is not all most of us would desire; :but perhaps the prices are low for the space offered. John H. Carpenter, Jr., of 600 Madi- son A venue, will tell you all about it. -PENTHOUSE . FAME ON THE PACIFIC COAST [From the Portland Oregonian] He was well known in Portland, hav- ing been with another man when the man was shot by Patrolman Finn in 1918. OCTOBER 12. 19 2, 9 ":}i' ...:--:. ." : =$. ..:.... @Helen Brealcer, Paris Ernest Hemingway has written a new and powerful novel of love and war A Farewell to Arms now on sale at all bookstores $2.5 0 Scri bners SÉ 60 EAST 54! STREET NEW YORK HOTEL d RESTAURANT DI ECTION MAX A.HAERING [FORME RLY 10 YEARS] E L VS É E I EAST 56"! STREET THE GLUY AS WilliAMS .. BOOK Hi funniest pictures. They'll make you smile, laugh, roar, guffaw! Preface by BENCHLEY Foreword by GIBSON $2.50 DOUBLEDAY,DORAN 4t "- , ,. " .. i ".i" ) "